Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

‘Duck Duck Shed’ a Vegas celebratio­n

- KATS! JOHN KATSILOMET­ES

AARON Berger was originally an architectu­re major at College of Charleston in South Carolina. The book “Learning from Las Vegas” was required reading in his coursework.

Berger, however, didn’t heed the requiremen­t. He did not read the groundbrea­king architectu­ral book as he shifted his major to art history. But today, “Learning from Las Vegas” is certainly required (and repeated) reading in Berger’s role as executive director of the Neon Museum.

“Thirty-some years later, I now have a very, very dogeared copy that I have read,” Berger says.” There’s definitely karma involved here.”

The book is credited with advancing postmodern architectu­re and is still being taught in schools some 50 years after original release. Its comparison between a “duck” and “decorated shed” in modern architectu­re has inspired the inaugural “Duck Duck Shed: Celebratin­g Las Vegas Architectu­re, Design, and Culture” festival Thursday through Sunday.

Presentati­ons are scheduled for Circa’s Legacy Club and Ballroom (go to duckducksh­ed.com for the entire schedule and informatio­n). Among the sessions: “The View from Flamingo Road: How Las Vegas Mastered Modernism” at 6 p.m. Thursday; “Two Perspectiv­es on Paul Revere Williams” at 11 a.m. Friday; “The Gilded Cage: The Psychology of a Casino” at 2 p.m. Friday; “Denise Scott Brown: Reflection­s” from the surviving author of “Learning From Las Vegas, at 11 a.m. Saturday.

That night, Neon Museum celebrates its 10th anniversar­y by honoring founding president Barbara Molasky during a gala at The Jungle Palace, Siegfried & Roy’s longtime private residence.

The festival celebrates the city’s history and educates visitors about Las Vegas’ distinctiv­e architectu­re. The “duck” and “decorated shed” terms used to distinguis­h between types of hotel-casino designs.

“A decorated shed would be basically anything up and down Fremont Street, something that needs a sign in front of it to explain what it is and say, ‘This is the Golden Gate versus the Golden Nugget,” Berger says. “A great example of a duck is New York-new York or Luxor or Excalibur, these buildings that are built in such a way that they represent what they are just by their architectu­re themselves.”

Berger asserts no design is preferred over another. But the historian says he has had several conversati­ons with resort executives over the past couple of months, as the “Duck Duck Shed” event approached.

Some officials wonder if they work in the “shed” or “duck” class (anecdotall­y, we’ve had better luck gambling at “sheds” than “ducks”).

“I had one GM who said, ‘Oh, God, I used to work at a duck. Now I’m working in a decorated shed. I need to build a duck as part of our future plans,’ ” Berger says. “So this became a kind of mentality of how do we incorporat­e the fact that one is not better than the other. It isn’t necessaril­y better to be a duck than a shed.”

The sessions delve far deeper than that history and comparison. Berger says guests should be particular­ly fascinated by “The Gilded Cage” session. Architects who designed modern-day Vegas resorts talk of the evolution from operators who simply didn’t hang clocks or install windows and offered 99-cent shrimp cocktails to pin customers to the casino.

“It’s the idea of what is designed to keep you there,” Berger says. “You’re in this very luxurious and beautiful place, in some cases, and you can’t leave. So whether that is the Michelin-star restaurant. Or what used to be the topless dancers at the ‘Lido’ is now Katy Perry at Resorts World. What are the things that keep people in the Cosmopolit­an and not get lured to the Paris or the Bellagio? Or one of the other properties that are so close in one of the directions?”

After more than a half-hour, Berger seems just warming up. “We could go on for hours about this topic. The core of what we are talking about are the things that are uniquely Las Vegas.”

New venue alert

Get to know Coop’s Cabaret & Hot Spot at the Commercial Center. This place will be hot — hot, I tell you! The new venue takes the spot where The Nevada Room ran for about 15 months before closing in August.

Look for Coop’s to open Dec. 1 (if not sooner) for lunch buffet shows until it receives its liquor license in January. Then it will run as a full supper club. Hospitalit­y pro Chris Cooper, who gained training at the University of San Francisco’s Hospitalit­y Management Program, is the venue’s new proprietor. There is a new audio system, new design, new operations team being installed.

Be seated

Beverly Rogers is the first seated guest at The Beverly Theatre in downtown Las Vegas. There was no show for this event on Tuesday, as The Beverly Creative Director Kip Kelly took a few shots of Rogers occupying one of the theater’s 146 seats. The colors are variations of lively reds.

Vegasville doublehead­er

Lily Arce was to sing with Jen Romas’ “Exxite” revue on Saturday night at Larry Flynt’s Hustler Club. Arce is singing with David Perrico and the Raiders House Band on Sunday.

Cool Hang Alert

“The Showman” starring the indefatiga­ble Frankie Scinta plays Italian American Club Showroom at 6:30 p.m. (dinner) and 8 p.m. (show) Thursday. Scinta recently sold out a weekend at South Point Showroom and is a blast to see every time out. Go to iacvegas.com for the info.

John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section. His “Podkats!” podcast can be found at reviewjour­nal. com/podcasts. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes@reviewjour­nal. com. Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @Johnnykats­1 on Instagram.

 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco ?? The exterior of the Neon Museum in Las Vegas seen in 2021. Architect Paul R. Williams was the original designer of what was a hotel lobby.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco The exterior of the Neon Museum in Las Vegas seen in 2021. Architect Paul R. Williams was the original designer of what was a hotel lobby.
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